[lit-ideas] Re: La Dolce Vita

  • From: "Mike Geary" <atlas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 17 Dec 2005 18:14:10 -0600

My favorite Fellini film is Roma and my favorite scene in ALL of cinematography 
is the papal fashion show in Roma.   Wonderful, wonderful.

If you like to be disconcerted by films try Bunuel's The Exterminating Angel.  
One of the weirder but more fascinating films I've seen.

Mike Geary
Memphis


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Andy Amago 
  To: lit-ideas 
  Sent: Saturday, December 17, 2005 5:33 PM
  Subject: [lit-ideas] La Dolce Vita



  We just finished watching Felini's La Dolce Vita (got too late last to finish 
it).  Fabulous movie.  I can see why Felini is so admired.  A discussion with 
Alexander Payne (another director, I believe, in the DVD "Introduction") 
compares Felini to modern novelists.  He said modern but I wonder if he meant 
post modern.  I'm not well versed, really not versed at all, in 20th century 
literature, so I don't know who I would compare him to.  Felini has an 
awareness of the isolation, alienation, disconnection that is missing in movies 
such as Dangerous Liaisons, where the characters are just as isolated but the 
director seems unaware of it.  After we finished watching La Dolce Vita I felt 
like there was something poked around, stirred around, inside me but I can't 
quite say what it is.  Marcello watching, endlessly conquesting; Paparazzo with 
his camera throughout, observing without caring; the sting ray at the end 
blindly lookin g ...  Maybe profundity can't be put into words.  Not by me 
anyway.  I'm sure if I'd enjoy his more circus-y later movies but I don't know.

Other related posts: